Poor access to safe water fuels cholera outbreak in Syria
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[November 11, 2022]
DAMASCUS (Reuters) - Poor access to
safe water has exacerbated a cholera outbreak rampaging across Syria's
war-battered provinces, where local authorities are struggling to
contain the spread with chlorine tablets and vaccines.
More than 35,000 suspected cases of cholera have been reported across
the country, according to the United Nations’ children's agency. UNICEF
said only approximately 2,500 have been tested, of which nearly half
were confirmed positive.
"Finding a single case of cholera means you've got an outbreak," said
Zuhair al-Sahwi, the head of communicable and chronic diseases at the
Syrian health ministry.
He said the curve had largely flattened, with a slowdown in the number
of confirmed new cases daily.
Sahwi said the ministry had recorded 46 deaths as a result of delays in
accessing medical care and had requested cholera vaccines from the World
Health Organization.
According to the WHO, Syria’s cases are linked to a rampaging outbreak
that began in Afghanistan in June - then spread to Pakistan, Iran, Iraq,
then Syria and Lebanon.
Cholera is typically spread through contaminated water, food or sewage.
It can cause severe diarrhoea and dehydration – which can kill if left
untreated.
Syria's water pipes and pumping stations have been ravaged by more than
a decade of war and a drought this year left levels in its main river,
the Euphrates, particularly low.
Nabbough al-Awwa, an eye, nose, and throat doctor in Damascus, said that
dumping solid waste into stagnant waters had contributed to the spread.
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An internally displaced boy listens to
civil defense members during a cholera awareness campaign, at a camp
in northern rebel-held Idlib, Syria September 24, 2022. REUTERS/Khalil
Ashawi/Files
"If the river is running, it’s fine.
But when the water levels got low because of the rising temperatures
in a lot of countries in the world, these bacteria started to
proliferate and spread," Awwa told Reuters.
With farmers relying on untreated river water, vegetables quickly
became contaminated and the virus spread to the cities, he said.
Shops and restaurants in the capital have tweaked their menus to
protect their customers.
"We stopped using leafy greens for the sake of public health," said
Maher, who runs a falafel shop in Damascus.
The capital remains relatively shielded, according to WHO data, with
the highest case numbers recorded in the vast desert province of
Deir Ezzor in the east and Raqqa and Aleppo in the north – which
rely on the Euphrates the most.
United Nations agencies have mostly been trucking water to affected
communities and disbursing sterilisation tablets.
But to keep up their efforts, the U.N. children's agency says it
still needs around $9 million in funds to get it to the end of the
year.
(Reporting by Kinda Makieh and Firas Makdesi; Writing by Maya
Gebeily; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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